More utilities will begin to pay for buildings to upgrade to energy-efficient products if it means shedding peak power demand.
Everyone loves OLEDs, but no one knows how to make big ones. Kateeva says it can help.
You probably don’t think of Panasonic as a green company. That might begin to change with the Sanyo deal.
Sideways lighting has a lot of benefits, says Lunera, a LED company that emerged from fashion photography.
The CEC wants to put energy efficiency standards on TVs, the big manufacturers in Japan see energy efficiency as the next thing and more.
It’s a bracelet. It’s a watchband. It’s an OLED light.
A conceivably cheap way to retrofit homes may go nationwide and then global with a little luck.
Face it. You won’t hold an IPO. Your company will be sold. Here’s who is buying.
PG&E adds thin provisioning and MAID data storage systems to the data center technologies it will pay people to install. Next up could be cooling water at night to drive cooling during the day.
Samsung has a green phone. Here’s the good and the bad.
The big VMWorld 2009 virtualization conference in San Francisco is all about interoperability to push adoption of virtualization – and save electricity.
An idea coined by Stan Ovshinsky for memory chips is finally coming to the fore.
Green software is popping up all over. Here are our favorites.
PG&E has given away $20 million in three years and wants to increase it. But you might want to cut down on storage.
The consulting firm has issued a report that looks at how investing in energy efficiency technologies and deployment makes for a great return on investments for the United States.
The Korean electronics giant wants spend $4.3 billion to cut its factory emissions by 50 percent within four years and develop eco-friendly products. As large companies invest oodles of money to go green, their much smaller competitors will feel the pressure do so, too.
Flash memory drives use far less power than conventional drives. The problem has been the price and short life. A team of silicon vets at Sandforce claim they’ve cracked the code.
The maker of thin clients has come out with Virtual Desktop Accelerator, software it claims can improve the performance of remote computing by up to three times.
The computing giant is researching lithium-air batteries, a technology with much promise but many challenges for commercial applications. Also in the works is a supercomputer cooled with water at the chip level – something IBM says could apply to broader data center cooling.
Intel's new Moorestown platform aims to reduce idle power use by mobile internet devices fifty-fold compared to previous platforms. It's also working on "sleep-state networking" for PCs and laptops and other power-saving advances.
Ken Gonzalez, group product manager, Symantec Global Services, lays out the case for green IT.
Energy storage: It's the most popular concept right now with energy VCs. And some in Washington want to goose the market with incentives.